What Lao Tzu Reveals About Your Psychology

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychopractitioner
6 min read

This article is available in French only.

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Lao Tzu: Psychological Portrait

Lao Tzu, a legendary figure in Chinese philosophy and founder of Taoism, has intrigued humanity for millennia. Beyond the mysticism, a modern psychological analysis reveals an individual with a singular personality structure, explaining his revolutionary approach to existence. Let us examine this portrait through the contemporary tools of cognitive and behavioral psychology.

The Historical and Legendary Figure

Historical sources about Lao Tzu remain enigmatic. Some place him in the 6th century BCE, others question his very existence. This historical fluidity already reflects a psychological dimension: the acceptance of uncertainty and the refusal of attachment to rigid certainties. The Tao Te Ching, the foundational work attributed to Lao Tzu, proposes a philosophy based on abandoning control and achieving harmony with natural flows.

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Analysis of Young's Schemas

Early maladaptive schemas, developed by Jeffrey Young, offer a relevant framework for interpretation. Lao Tzu presents an atypical psychological configuration regarding several dominant schemas.

The Self-Sacrifice Schema

Classically, one finds in Lao Tzu a sophisticated form of self-sacrifice: he renounced positions of power, rejected social recognition and material wealth. However, this abandonment differs qualitatively from the traditional pathological schema. Where ordinary self-sacrifice results from a negative belief about one's own worth, Lao Tzu's emanates from a conscious decision and a radically different vision of what constitutes a successful life.

The Mistrust/Abuse Schema

Legend reports that Lao Tzu departed civilization by sharing his philosophical principles with the guardian of the mountain pass. This voluntary retreat suggests a certain disappointment with social and political structures. Rather than pathological mistrust, this represents a lucid critique of human systems founded on constraint and control.

The Absence of Entitlement Schema

Remarkably, the entitlement schema appears absent from Lao Tzu's profile. No demand for recognition, no expectation of special attention. This absence profoundly distinguishes his psychological structure from egocentric profiles, indicating a rare psychological integrity.

Personality Architecture

Dominant Traits

Openness to Experience: Lao Tzu demonstrates profound curiosity about life's mysteries and an acceptance of inexplicable paradoxes. The Tao Te Ching overflows with oxymorons: "Emptiness contains everything," "Weakness conquers strength." Paradoxical Low Conscientiousness: Counterintuitively, while one might expect low conscientiousness in someone ignoring social conventions, Lao Tzu shows hypervigilance to natural and cosmic subtleties. This is consciousness reoriented—not toward social planning, but toward observing universal flow. Profound Introversion: Lao Tzu's retreat reveals extreme introversion. Not dysfunctional, but rather well-suited to his objectives of inner wisdom and illumination. Unconventional Agreeableness: Lao Tzu seeks neither to please nor to dominate. His agreeableness expresses itself through adaptation to the nature of things rather than through social conformity.

Defense Mechanisms

Transcendent Sublimation

Lao Tzu employs sublimation, but at a sophisticated level. Rather than transforming anxiety into neurotic symptoms, he transforms it into ontological questioning and philosophical creation. The Tao Te Ching becomes the container for his existential inquiries.

Spiritual Denial

An apparent risk: using Taoist philosophy to deny difficult social realities. However, Lao Tzu's renunciation does not appear pathologically reactive but consciously chosen. His departure represents less a flight than a voluntary reorientation of priorities.

Paradoxical Intellectualization

Fundamentally, Lao Tzu uses intellectualization in an original way: not to master anxiety, but to recognize its limits. "He who knows does not speak, he who speaks does not know." This metacognitive proposition reveals an awareness of the limitations of rational discourse.

CBT Perspective: Applicable Lessons

1. Cognitive Flexibility

The first Taoist lesson for CBT practice: cultivate cognitive flexibility. Taoism teaches that rigidity creates suffering. In CBT, we teach our patients to identify their rigid automatic thoughts. Lao Tzu suggests a prior step: accepting the ambiguity inherent in existence.

Clinical Application: Propose to anxious patients a gradual acceptance of uncertainty, rather than only refuting catastrophic thoughts.

2. Deactivating Schemas Through Acceptance

Rather than fighting Young's schemas, Lao Tzu proposes observing them without judgment. This approach prefigures Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), derived from CBT principles.

Clinical Application: With patients having deeply rooted schemas, encourage acceptance rather than only cognitive restructuring.

3. Mindfulness and Observation

Taoist philosophy is essentially mindful: observing the present moment without intention to modify it. This practice reduces activation of reactive schemas and decreases anxious hypervigilance.

Clinical Application: Integrate Taoist meditative practice into CBT protocols for anxiety disorders.

4. Recontextualization of Values

Lao Tzu invites us to reconsider the dominant values of ambient culture. In CBT, we can encourage patients to question internalized messages concerning success, beauty, and social status.

Clinical Application: When working on schemas, explore not only their origin but also their alignment with the patient's authentic values versus introjected cultural values.

5. Creative Non-action (Wu Wei)

Wu Wei, often translated as "non-action," means acting in harmony with the nature of things rather than against it. It is relevant for perfectionists, Type A individuals, and those with hyperactive conscientiousness.

Clinical Application: Encourage patients to explore how constant effort fuels their anxiety, and to develop measured action aligned with their nature.

Pathology and Balance

Objectively, Lao Tzu might have presented certain traits of a personality disorder: extreme social withdrawal, indifference to recognition. However, several factors distinguish his profile from authentic pathology:

  • Functionality: He succeeded in transmitting his wisdom and influenced millions of beings.
  • Consciousness: His choices appear conscious and thoughtful, not impulsive or reactive.
  • Internal Consistency: His actions correspond to his philosophy, revealing psychological integrity.

Conclusion

Lao Tzu represents a fascinating case of a highly developed personality that transcended ordinary psychological structures without pathology. For the modern CBT psychopractitioner, he offers a precious invitation: to recognize that mental health is not merely the absence of disorder, but the capacity to realign one's life with one's deepest values.

Lao Tzu's schemas do not disappear—they transform into wisdom. His retreat is not flight but quest. His silence is not silence but profound listening. These transpositions perhaps represent the ultimate goal of all therapy: not the elimination of our psychological structures, but their conscious integration in service of an aligned life.


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Gildas Garrec, Psychopraticien TCC

About the author

Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner

Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 900 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Sérénité.

📚 16 published books📝 900+ articles🎓 CBT certified

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What Lao Tzu Reveals About Your Psychology | Psychologie et Sérénité